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From Reznikoff To Public Enemy by Philip Metres
From Reznikoff To Public Enemy by Philip Metres
POEM SAMPLER
BY P H I L I P M E T R E S
“It is difficult / to get the news from poems / Yet men die miserably every day / for lack / of
what is found there.”
These famous lines from William Carlos Williams’ “Asphodel, That Greeny Flower” argue
against viewing poetry as reported news. Yet Williams, most notably in Paterson, and many
other 20th-century poets (from the Objectivists to hip-hop artists) have sought to marry
poetry with the news. Drawing from the ballad tradition and from Modernist poets’
experiments with collage, these poets frequently employed documentary materials to give
voice to stories of people and movements that the mass media tend to ignore or
misrepresent. In this sense, they echo earlier lines in “Asphodel”: “my heart rouses /
thinking to bring you news / of something // that concerns you / and concerns many men.”
Such poetry arises from the idea that poetry is not a museum-object to be observed from
afar, but a dynamic medium that informs and is informed by the history of the moment. In
contrast, George Szirtes, writing in the October 2007 issue of Poetry magazine, argues that
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“poetry is useless as evidence. As far as I know, no poem has been adduced as evidence in
court. The truths the poem deals with are not evidentiary truths. . . . They do not lead back
to the real life outside the poem: their truths refer to the real life inside the poem.” The
documentary poem opposes Szirtes’ idea of a closed system, inviting “the real life outside
the poem” into it while also offering readers a journey into the poem. Because of this
double movement, documentary poems constantly court their own collapse, testing a
poem’s tensile boundaries in the face of what Wallace Stevens called “the pressure of reality.”
He defined this as “life in a state of violence, not physically violent as yet for us in America,
but physically violent for millions of our friends and for still millions of our enemies and
spiritually violent, it may be said, for everyone else” (“The Noble Rider and the Sound of
Words”). Stevens never sounded so much like Martin Luther King Jr.
The successful documentary poem withstands the pressure of reality to remain a poem in its
own right: its language and form cannot be reduced to an ephemeral poster, ready made for
its moment but headed for the recycling bin. While it may be that such poems will not
“stand up” in a court of law, they testify to the often unheard voices of people struggling to
survive in the face of unspeakable violence. In the words of C.D. Wright in One Big Self, “I
too love. Faces. Hands. The circumference / Of the oaks. I confess. To nothing / You could
use. In a court of law.” These poems ride the ambiguity between a nothing and a something
that can be used. Their power resides in their negotiation between language of evidence and
language of transcendence.
The following roughly chronological list of documentary poems offers a few highlights of
the tradition of poet as journalist, poet as documentarian, poet as historian, poet as agitator.
1. “IV: Domestic Scenes” and “VIII: Negroes” from Testimony: The United States,
1885–1890 (1934, 1978–9) and Holocaust (1975) by Charles Reznikoff
One could use any number of American balladeers—both anonymous and famous—as a
starting point for a list of documentary poetry. Arguably, Ezra Pound’s Cantos—that epic
poem “containing history”—could also fit the bill. But Charles Reznikoff ’s Testimony and
Holocaust offer an apt point of departure. Part of a group of poets (who include Louis
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Zukofsky, George Oppen, Carl Rakosi, and Basil Bunting) that came to be known as the
Objectivists for their poetry of strict description and unswerving attention to the world,
Reznikoff worked in a legal publishing house summarizing court records.
This labor led to his major works, two book-length docu-poems that derive their lines from
court proceedings (often highlighting racial crimes) in both the United States and Germany.
Testimony, originally published as prose in 1934, became a massive two-volume poetic
meditation on America that was completed in 1978–9. For Reznikoff, as for the 19th-
century balladeers, the story of America unfolded in often shocking acts of violence—acts
that demonstrated the dark sides of American life: racism, patriarchal violence, and petty
hatreds. Holocaust, similarly, compresses 26 volumes of courtroom testimony from the trials
of Nazi war criminals in Nuremberg and Jerusalem. In the poem, Reznikoff self-
deprecatingly offers himself as a poetic medium, a secondary witness to the horrors of the
Shoah.
The following selections from the beginning of Testimony—“IV: Domestic Scenes,” “VIII:
Negroes,” “IX” and “X”—dramatize the violence of racial and sexual oppression with raw
understatement. Reznikoff ’s adaptation of spare, legalistic language makes the poems
vibrate with incommunicability, especially because he connects seemingly disparate
examples of American violence, including a Negro who was beaten and killed after allegedly
looking into a white family’s window, an Irish woman who disappeared and later was found
murdered, and an entire town that died when the railroad never came.
2. “Absalom” and “George Robinson: Blues” from The Book of the Dead (1938) by
Muriel Rukeyser
Muriel Rukeyser’s The Book of the Dead is an unforgettable long poem about mine workers
afflicted by silicosis in West Virginia during the late 1920s and early 1930s. Having joined
friend Nancy Naumburg, a radical journalist and photographer, for a trip to Gauley
Junction, West Virginia, Rukeyser uses court records, first-person interviews, and poetic
narrative to create a poem that evokes “The Waste Land”—if it had been written by Rosa
Luxemburg. This poem is one of the least-known great long poems of the 20th century.
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Employing a range of poetic forms (from blues to sonnets), Rukeyser honors the voices and
stories of West Virginia mining folk who struggle to make sense of their individual and
collective losses. In this labor, Rukeyser becomes a poetic Isis, piecing together the Osirises
of Gauley Junction.
Like Reznikoff ’s Testimony, Rukeyser’s Book of the Dead includes voices that are not typically
part of the chorus of American life. “Absalom” and “George Robinson: Blues” are both
pivotal dramatic monologues within the longer poem, mediating the voices of a bereft
mother of miners and an African-American miner, respectively, while “The Disease” uses
transcripts from a doctor’s testimony about silicosis. The penultimate lines of “Absalom,”
spoken by a mother on behalf of her dead son, come to represent Rukeyser’s own
reclamation project: “He shall not be diminished, never; / I shall give a mouth to my son.”
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of life during the years of unprecedented prosperity after World War II. Harry Smith’s
famous Anthology of American Folk Music (1952), one of Dylan’s seminal influences,
contains a set of songs that demonstrate the balladeer’s tradition of adapting lurid news
stories, such as the sinking of the Titanic (cf. “When That Great Ship Went Down”) or the
assassination of a president (cf. “Charles Guiteau”), and telling them from an outsider’s
point of view. The ballad, after all, has long been admitted into the poetry canon, from
outright ballads such as “Barbara Allen” to the hymn-based poems of Emily Dickinson,
which follow the meter and rhyme of the ballad.
“The Lonesome Death” departs from some of the strictures of the poetic ballad form, but
its use of rhyme and compressed storytelling places it within this tradition. It tells of the
murder, by a wealthy, politically connected man named William Zantzinger, of a 51-year-
old black kitchen maid named Hattie Carroll, and his subsequent sentence of six months in
jail. The sentence came in August 1963; just two months later, Dylan had already recorded
the song and was playing it regularly during live shows and on television. Bringing to light
not only the gruesome story but the sentimentalizing coverage of the event in the mass
media (“now ain’t the time for your tears”), Dylan engaged public attention in a way he
would repeat years later, when he took on the case of Rubin “Hurricane” Carter in
“Hurricane”—a song whose selective shaping of the events of a murder has been as debated
almost as much as the case itself.
Some have noted how Cardenal’s poetry detailing the past served a critical historiographical
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function in a society where dissent was suppressed; some of the poems written in the heat of
the revolution occasionally lapse into an uncritical celebration of all done in the name of
revolution. Translator Robert Pring-Mill, who first called Cardenal’s poetry “documentary,”
notes in his introduction that these poems use filmic techniques such as “crosscutting,
accelerated montage, or flash frames . . . [which] is aimed at helping to shape the future—
involving the reader in the poetic process in order to provoke him into full political
commitment” (ix–x). As his readers put together the fragments of history, they participate
in its telling and offer their own versions of where their common future might lead. The
following excerpt is the opening of the poem “Zero Hour.”
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In this poem, Scott records the process of uncovering his personal, familial, and political
relationships to the subterranean machinations of the CIA in the 1960s. The first in a
trilogy of long poems, it tells the previously untold story of CIA involvement in Indonesia,
particularly during the 1965 massacre of a half-million people. Scott turns to poetry partly
because he can find no one who will publish an unexpurgated version of the CIA’s role in
Indonesia and elsewhere during the Cold War. Poetry, for Scott, flies under the radar of the
censoring apparatus still in place in prose. Though the poem occasionally lapses into (or
perhaps thrives upon) conspiracy theories, it also demonstrates how poetry can become
both a medium for and a matrix of unspoken histories. Just as Whitman proposed to sing
for “many long dumb voices,” Scott attempts to accurately tell the story in a form that is his
own, though it is based on William Carlos Williams’ “triadic foot” of three-line stanzas
written in staircased indentation.
Yet despite its grim subject the song contains plenty of poetry in its relentless allusions, both
musical and linguistic; when Flav compares the loss of limbs to “compilation,” for instance,
he uses the metaphors of the music industry to lay bare the brute economics of emergency
medical treatment. I can’t help but think of Whitman’s “Song of Myself,” in which the poet
juxtaposes the selling of a quadroon girl with the amputation of a diseased limb that “drops
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horribly in a pail.” For Whitman, as for Flav, black people have been reduced to expendable
appendages.
9. “News Report, September 1991: U.S. Buried Iraqi Soldiers Alive in Gulf War” by
Denise Levertov
In “News Report,” Denise Levertov bypasses some of her earlier lyric attempts at antiwar
poetry by collaging a back-page journalistic account of the U.S. mass burial of Iraqi soldiers;
that is, the poet performs a “cut-up” of the original article, fragmenting its language to
convey the trauma of a U.S. military operation that involved bulldozing trenches during
Operation Desert Storm, thus burying alive the Iraqi soldiers inside.
Repeating and juxtaposing the words of the U.S. military spokesmen, the poet highlights
the limited media access to the war (and hence the lack of nonmilitary witnesses to the
deaths) and underlines the war’s connections to capitalism. Phrases such as “carefully
planned and / rehearsed” and “the tactic was designed” easily could have emerged from a
corporate board meeting. The terrible limit of corporate thinking is captured in a colonel’s
assertion that the mass burial of Iraqis was justifiable because burying the bodies
individually was not “cost-effective” because it might have resulted in additional American
casualties.
10. Coda
In the past few months, I’ve come across four other notable works of poetry that rely on
documentary materials in intriguing ways.
Martha Collins’ Blue Front (2006) engages in an act of historiography in which the poet
attempts to reconstruct her father’s experience, as a five-year-old, of witnessing the lynching
of a black man in the small town of Cairo, Illinois. Collins presents the contradictory and
overlapping accounts of what happened on that fateful day to probe the difficulty of
chronicling traumatic events.
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Jorie Graham’s Overlord (2006) uses snippets of language from soldiers who participated in
Operation Overlord, the U.S. storming of Omaha Beach on the Normandy coast during
World War II. She also uses the meditation on a past war to critique the ongoing conflict in
Iraq.
C.D. Wright’s One Big Self (2006) culls statements and stories from the poet’s interviews of
Louisiana prison inmates, conducted with photographer Deborah Luster (perhaps following
in the tradition of Muriel Rukeyser’s trip to Gauley Junction with photographer Nancy
Naumburg). Wright juggles these voices and images in ways that create “one big self ” that
contains author, reader, and prisoner.
Finally, in God Bless (2007), H.L. Hix composes a series of mathematically formal poems
“constructed entirely of passages from speeches, executive orders, and other public
statements of George W. Bush,” then interleaves them with poems based on the letters and
speeches of Osama bin Laden. The poems comically, and frighteningly, transform George
Bush’s language into forms as elaborate and exotic as the sestina and the ghazal.
It is worth noting that these recent forays into documentary poetry often invite a chorale
effect, with multiple voices and voicings merging into a larger (but often dissonant)
symphony. These are poems that don’t simply “contain multitudes” (as Whitman bragged)
but seethe and breathe multitudes.
Originally Published: November 5th, 2007
Philip Metres was born in San Diego and grew up in the suburbs of Chicago. He earned a BA from Holy Cross College
and both an MFA and PhD from Indiana University. Metres is the author of the poetry collections To See the Earth
(2008), A Concordance of Leaves (2013),...
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